Nearly 5,000 cholera cases, 74 deaths in Tanzania

Haitian human rights and victims of Cholera protestors in Haiti rally in front of the Log Base of Minustah (United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti), in Port-au-Prince to demand justice and reparation.—AFP

GENEVA: Tanzania is facing a major cholera outbreak, counting nearly 5,000 cases and dozens of deaths, the World Health Organization said yesterday, calling for urgent action to stop the disease from spreading to neighboring countries. The UN health agency said that from August through Wednesday October 21, 4,922 cases of cholera had been tallied in 12 regions of Tanzania, and 74 deaths.

The east African country’s largest city Dar es Salaam was most affected with some 3,500 cases, said Dominique Legros, head of WHO’s cholera unit. The fact that the disease had reached the city, which is home to more than four million people, sparked great concern, he said, adding that Dar es Salaam’s size and its numerous slum areas was “making things more complicated in terms of access to water and to build latrines.” Cholera, which is transmitted through contaminated drinking water and causes acute diarrhoea, most recently spread to an island in the Zanzibar archipelago, which in a matter of days tallied 140 cases, Legros said.

Cholera is endemic in the region, and Legros warned that the looming rainy season, with a “very bad” weather forecast, threatened to push the outbreak beyond Tanzania’s borders. “We have to really be ready for this and try to control the outbreak as soon as possible in Tanzania,” Legros said. The last time there had been a massive outbreak in eastern Africa in the late 1990s, some 200,000 people had been infected across four countries, including 8,000 deaths, he said.

Only a few months before the latest outbreak hit, cholera briefly spread among Burundian refugees in Tanzania, killing more than 30 people. WHO says $2 million (1.8 million euros) are needed to urgently ramp up efforts to control the outbreak, including water trucks, chlorinating water and treatment for the sick. But Legros insisted that efforts must go beyond the emergency response. “What we see each time (there is a cholera outbreak) is a sort of fire brigade approach, and then the outbreak is over and everybody disappears,” he said. “The water trucking will stop and people will go back to the previous situation where they were taking water from the river and the wells that were contaminated,” he said, insisting that this “it is that circle that we must break.”—AFP